by copious.abundance » Tue 15 Apr 2008, 16:06:15
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Schadenfreude', '
')Why isn't it bigger news? How come it hasn't been reported on MSM? And if the news was as big as it appears, why hasn't Chesapeake's stock exploded? I know the chart looks good, but it doesn't reflect the enormity of the good news.
Wuzzup?
You just showed a chart showing Chesapeake's stock exploding! It looks like it really went up after the CEO announced the new shale deposit in Louisiana that could be bigger than the Barnett.
As for the Barnett Shale itself, if you do a
google search you'll find stuff about it all over the place. It's real big news if you live in Texas, especially around Fort Worth. The Fort Worth paper has a page dedicated just to
cataloging the new Barnett drilling rigs for each week. I just counted 54 new ones for this week.
In addition to the Barnett, the
Marcellus Shale in the Appalachians could hold a staggering 516 trillion cubic feet, with at least 50 tcf of it extractable. This was really just "discovered" late last year.
Even more recent is the
Utica Shale where just one company's acreage is estimated to hold 4 trillion cubic feet.
Here's a thread I started on Chesapeake's
Haynesville Shale, which is the one Chesapeake said could be bigger than the Barnett, and which the company says could hold 20 trillion cubic feet just on its 500K acre leases.
I recently read an article in a local Texas paper that Chesapeake and some other company are furiously-but-quietly snapping up leases in an area west of San Antonio, which makes me think they've discovered yet another one of these.
Then there is the
Horn River Shale in NW British Columbia which EnCana and EOG Resources are going ga-ga over. According to
this it's got an estimated 6 tcf.
And as I mentioned before, there are many more in addition to these. They seem to be popping up all over the place.
Regarding TheDude's comment, yes, this stuff is more expensive to drill than conventional natural gas. It would be interesting to see a situation where we have a resource that is abundant, but somewhat expensive.